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St Kilda. Looking across to Outer Harbour along the edge of the boat channel and walkway. Frindged by mangroves. : 無料・フリー素材/写真

St Kilda. Looking across to Outer Harbour along the edge of the boat channel and walkway. Frindged by mangroves. / denisbin
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St Kilda. Looking across to  Outer Harbour along the edge of the boat channel and walkway. Frindged by mangroves.

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ライセンスクリエイティブ・コモンズ 表示-継承 2.1
説明St Kilda.As the closest point on the coast to Salisbury and near the estuary of the Little Para River this quaint beachside town used to be the exclusive holiday haven of the wealthy from Salisbury. Fishermen huts were erected on the mud flats in the 1860s by some Salisbury residents. Then Thomas Evans surveyed the area in 1873 and the government township blocks of St Kilda were snapped up by Salisbury residents in 1874. John Harvey, the founder of Salisbury, is credited with naming the place because it reminded him of St. Kilda in the Outer Hebrides off Scotland according to the Register newspaper in 1896. St Kilda in the Hebrides and in SA had massive bird life. Certainly Harvey bought a block in 1874 so he might have been asked to suggest a name for the seaside town. Locals who had erected huts at St Kilda in the 1860s generally received £15 compensation for them. In 1895 Matthias Lucas got John Harvey in his old age to lay the foundation stone for a hotel, built of local Salisbury stone. This St Kilda hotel was licensed in 1898. In 1957 this hotel, at the height of popularity of an Australian song by Slim Dusty called the “pub with no beer,” became the pub with no beer. The licensee at that time Mr Waterman took the license from St. Kilda so that he could open the Hotel Elizabeth. It took a year for the new license to be issued for Elizabeth and then for the St. Kilda hotel to re-open. A school opened at St. Kilda near where the tram museum is located in 1902 and ran, except for a couple of years, through to 1949. In 1924 a Post Office also opened at the same spot, called Moilong Post Office. Moilong was adopted from an Aboriginal word meaning “where the tide comes in” to avoid confusion with that beachside suburb in Melbourne which is also called St. Kilda. But the name of Moilong was never popular. The Post Office was re-named St. Kilda Post Office in 1965. It closed in the 1970s. In more recent years St. Kilda has witnessed the opening of the tram museum in 1967; the opening of the tram track to the beach in 1974; the opening of the adventure playground in 1982; the opening of the Mangrove Board Walk in 1984; and the latest boat ramp in 2002. The salt crystallization lagoons behind St. Kilda are part of the former Imperial Chemical Industries and now Chatham salt works whereby the salt brine is pumped from the ocean into the pans and then circulated to Cavan where the pans dry out and the salt is harvested. These salt pans were dug by hand by unemployed men during the depression. They opened in 1936 and the salt, about 750,000 tons a year, was mainly used by Penrice Soda for their production of soda ash at Osborne. The salt pans stretch for 35 kms from beyond Port Gawler to Cavan/Dry Creek. But Penrice Soda has stopped production of soda ash in South Australia and the salt pans areas is due to be sold probably for housing or industry.
撮影日2022-04-15 15:11:51
撮影者denisbin
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